• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

Ignoring Bad Lyrics

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
I condemn songs that teach false doctrine. I even dropped using some hymns in church because of weak or poor theology. I love music and proud of teaching others to be careful of "Christian" music that is of questionable value.

So, this morning, on parole from FB jail, I am listening to Mozart and humming along to his 1791 Motet in D (most beautiful, worshipful music) and my bride asked what the lyrics were saying. I had paid little attention to the Latin, so translated the title for her, "Ave Verum Corpus" - this is the true body.

She followed up, asking what does that mean?

Well, it is a Eucharistic chant (as the priest holds up the wafer in holy communion) written by Pope Innocent III in the 13th Century. It teaches damnable heresy.

Oh, my.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
Yes....I did the same with Pink Floyd :Wink.

Mozart is a little over my head. I lean towards impressionism.

One of my favorite compositions is Ravel's Boléro. I like the repetitiveness and the almost simplicity of the work (I find it oddly comforting). But its subject (when written for a ballet) is perhaps a bit...scandalous.

Another of my favorites is Images (composed his contemporary, Debussy). Debussy basically paints a picture of a visit (a visit he never actually took) to Spain.

What matters more - the ideas a composition contains or the way it is recieved?
 

Reynolds

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter

Song is great until the middle. When it says 'Didnt you say church should be more like a hospital?" it was all downhill from there.
 

AustinC

Well-Known Member
I have SiriusXM in my van. There are 4 Christian radio stations. One contemporary, one gospel, one southern gospel, and one preaching. When I listen to the songs on the three music channels, I find that one in ten songs is Godward and theologically sound. The other 9 are all about the human experience and what happened to that human. Most are free will, man determines God's action, songs that cheapen the nature and the grace of God.
When I open up the hymnal of my youth, from the IFCA church I grew up in, I am appalled by the vast majority of hymns that were just pathetic theology...if theology was even a purpose for the hymn.
An example of a terrible song: "I Come To The Garden Alone." It's just a sentimental, sappy, song with zero theological value. People sing it because it makes them feel good, not because it teaches anything about God.
So, yeah, Christianity has a vast array of terrible songs that will never be sung in heaven.
 

Squire Robertsson

Administrator
Administrator
My take is many of the songs with low to zero theological content is they were composed for singing on grandpa's or Uncle Fred's front porch, not in a church meeting.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
I did seminars in many churches on a biblical view of music. Music IS neutral - black notes on white paper. Just like lyrics are neutral - black letters on white paper.

But what is done with that can be good, bad, neutral. And mediocre, vile, or lifting to the soul
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord (Eph 5:19) gives us a basic outline for the church music

Psalms = Scripture
Hymns = from "celebrate", worship Who God is and What God has done
Spiritual Songs = odes (pretty much any common lyric) but with disclaimer "spiritual", not carnal.

So, church music is the Bible (not just the psalter) but to music, worship hymns focused on triune Godhead, and songs of praise, testimony, encouragement, cheristian living, missions, prayer (NOT worldly odes like "Coming Round the Mountain" or my wife's favorite song from Jr Church "Itsy Bitsy Spider".
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I wonder how much theological content a song must have to make it right. We often complain about songs of personal experience (one of my favorites, "It is Well With My Soul", is based on personal experience).

Can a song, like "In the Garden", not convey spiritual truth without being a theological work? It seems some psalms are written in a like manner.
 

Reynolds

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I wonder how much theological content a song must have to make it right. We often complain about songs of personal experience (one of my favorites, "It is Well With My Soul", is based on personal experience).

Can a song, like "In the Garden", not convey spiritual truth without being a theological work? It seems some psalms are written in a like manner.
I agree. The only songs I don't approve of are the ones who contain wrong theology.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
I truly LOVE so many genres of music, but many do NOT belong in our church and worship. They are individual choices, and we all are touched or enjoy sounds and artists, styles or eras. My kids said how thankful they were that we exposed them to all these sounds, but that we sought to keep the church a sacred haven for psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs.

My sons both pastor and have a solid approach to music in their churches. Yes, they have drums and keyboards, guitars and worship team, not quite what I had. But careful about the choice of songs and words to be true in teaching and testimony. Makes me proud (tho sometimes need earplugs for volume :))
 

tyndale1946

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I agree. The only songs I don't approve of are the ones who contain wrong theology.

When you sing "Jesus Paid It All"... All To Him I Owe... You know what you came to worship for and the song is your theological declaration... Brother Glen:)
 

AustinC

Well-Known Member
I wonder how much theological content a song must have to make it right. We often complain about songs of personal experience (one of my favorites, "It is Well With My Soul", is based on personal experience).

Can a song, like "In the Garden", not convey spiritual truth without being a theological work? It seems some psalms are written in a like manner.
The Psalms speak of a human experience in light of a theological truth. They are not sentmental in their focus. A song can do this as well. It is when the song seeks to glorify the human where I draw a line.
I heard a southern gospel song that gloried in how the man had defeated sin. It was all about that person making his way to God by his disciplined effort. (Wish I could recall the exact title) It was appalling to hear, yet most Christians in America wouldn't think twice and would applaud the vocal group for the song.
Here's the lyrics to the Garden. There is no value, other than sentimentality.
1 I come to the garden alone,
While the dew is still on the roses;
And the voice I hear, falling on my ear,
The Son of God discloses.

Refrain:
And He walks with me, and He talks with me,
And He tells me I am His own,
And the joy we share as we tarry there,
None other has ever known.

2 He speaks, and the sound of His voice
Is so sweet the birds hush their singing;
And the melody that He gave to me
Within my heart is ringing. [Refrain]

3 I'd stay in the garden with Him
Tho' the night around me be falling;
But He bids me go; thro' the voice of woe,
His voice to me is calling. [Refrain]
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
No, we don't. I wish we did, but a vast amount of American Christians are theologically illiterate.
Maybe more of us would, if it were not for criticism amongst ourselves. Christians have a long history of attacking their own.
 

Salty

20,000 Posts Club
Administrator
I often say (because I heard someone else say it)
The time most Baptists lie - is when they sing a hymnbook song.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
We could change some titles of hymns to reflect reality and NOT lie . . .

Sweet 30 Seconds of Prayer

Sitting on the Premises

Come Thou Almighty Dollar

No, Not Me

I Surrender Some

There Shall Be Sprinkles of Blessings

Oh, How I Like Jesus

Fill My Spoon, Lord

I Love to Sing About Telling the Story

Take My Life and Let Me Be

It Is My Secret What God Can Do

My Hope Is Built on Nothing Much
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I remember when churches changed the song Fill my Cup from "till I want no more" to "till it overflows".

It took me a long time to understand why (that some misunderstood "want").

How about "we Wiseman from orient are, baring three kinds of gifts we come from afar". If we sing the "three kinds of" really fast I think we can fit it in. :Geek
 
Top